Can You Recycle Neoprene?

manufacturing industry

Neoprene is a type of synthetic rubber also known as polychloroprene. DuPont is the inventor of neoprene, which is the trade name of this rubber product used in wetsuits, work gloves, as electrical insulation and in a wide variety of other commercial and industrial applications. It is available cured and uncured and can be soft or hard. While neoprene is widely used, it can in fact be recycled – a welcomed point of fact in an environmentally conscious society.

Like certain other types of rubber, recycled neoprene is used in a variety of products from shoes to golf head covers to iPod and laptop sleeves. Neoprene is recycled like other products and many waste management firms offer rubber recycling services to industrial and manufacturing companies.

Typically, when neoprene is recycled to create new products, it is blended with other types of synthetic rubbers. The properties of neoprene, including its durability, insulation properties, and resistance to oil, make it an ideal substance for a number of uses. By blending recycled rubber products into new products, waste is minimized and costs are lowered as well.

Some of the more popular uses for neoprene include medical bandages and braces, athletic shoe insoles, work gloves and boots, electronic device protectors, wetsuits, and automotive gaskets and pads. Where apparel and medical supports are concerned, some people may have a skin-sensitive reaction to neoprene, but its breathable, waterproof properties make it ideal for many medical applications.

Neoprene is also recycled into sheets of rubber and also neoprene fabric, sold by the yard just like other fabrics, and can be cut and sewn. Sheets and fabrics are made into different thicknesses and weights for a variety of applications. The number of products made from recycled neoprene and other synthetic rubbers is nearly endless. Besides the more popular uses, you can also buy dumbbells and other exercise equipment as well as wine totes and hats made from recycled rubber products.

Related wiseGEEK articles

Category






  
  
	

		

New: Discuss this Article

Posted by: cday
Where can you recycle neoprene? I have about 200 wetsuits that I can no longer use and would like to recycle them.

FREE: Subscribe to wiseGEEK

 
    learn more

our strict privacy policy ensures that your email address will be safe



Written by J. Beam

copyright © 2003 - 2008
conjecture corporation